Get Paid To Promote, Get Paid To Popup, Get Paid Display Banner -->

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Mexican Divorce...

Down below El Paso lies Juarez
Mexico is different, like a travel folder says
Cross the Rio Grande and you will find
An old adobe house
Where you leave your past behind...

now I understand we can't have a bunch of Mexicans crossing our borders illegally, raping and killing our white women, but aren't all Americans illegal aliens..did we come here legally or not or am I just an anchor baby..well, I don't rightly know but I saw a picture of a PUEBLO girl and I had the urge to marry her just in case she's not a citizen.. she could divorce me later but man oh man is she fine and sweet as Tupelo Honey...
but I was checking out Jan Brewer the sourpuss dumbass governor of AZTEC Land and why she's so fervent about capturing and jailing people from south of the border...it seems ol' Jan when not minding the crypt, is profitting with her friends from jailing illegals...Arizona has a private jail system which means it has a for profit jail sysytem:
By Jesse Strecker
An investigative report released this month by In These Times details how Arizona’s anti-immigrant S.B. 1070 law not only promises dramatic financial benefits for the private prison industry, but that lobbyists and administrators working for private prison corporations such as Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and Geo Group, played substantial parts in drafting and ensuring the passage of the bill.
Connections
In spite of claims to the contrary by Arizona Senator Russell Pearce’s (R-Mesa), records indicate that the legislator submitted a draft version of his S.B. 1070 bill for revisions to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a legislative consulting firm made up of elected officials and business leaders.
ALEC, a 501c3 non-profit, accepts draft bills submitted by lawmakers and corporations, and funnels them through a series of revisions meant to increase the bill’s viability both politically and legally. They also develop ‘model legislation’ which they hand out to legislators to bring back to their home states. In spite of a federal prohibition on 501(c)(3)s participating in the creation of legislation, ALEC boasts that their legislator members submit 1,000 pieces of ALEC-inspired legislation yearly, 20 percent of which passes.
Under the new law, anyone found without papers could face a 20-day prison sentence, not to mention holding time as those individuals await a newly burdened immigration court system, and a $100 fine. According to a report released by the National Immigration Forum in July 2009, the cost to taxpayers just to detain someone for those 20 days alone is about $2,820.
Another study, published by Syracuse University research institute TRAC, reports that the average waiting time between detention and trial date for undocumented immigrants has climbed in recent years to 443 days. That’s a cost of $62,463, about 70 percent of which is money in the pockets of the operators of detention facilities. Implementing S.B. 1070, however, will undoubtedly place extreme new burdens on an already financially strained court system, dramatically extending detention times for residents found to be without proper documentation..
One day married, next day free
Broken hearts for you and me
Takes no time for you to get a Mexican divorce...

No comments:

Post a Comment